Abstract
Flexible adaptation to changing environments is a representative executive control function implicated in the fronto-parietal network that requires appropriate extraction of goal-relevant information through perception of the external environment. It remains unclear, however, how the flexibility is achieved under situations where goal-relevant information is uncertain. To address this issue, the current study examined neural mechanisms for task switching in which task-relevant information involved perceptual uncertainty. Twenty-eight human participants of both sexes alternated behavioral tasks in which they judged motion direction or color of visually presented colored dot stimuli that moved randomly. Task switching was associated with fronto-parietal regions in the left hemisphere, and perception of ambiguous stimuli involved contralateral homologous fronto-parietal regions. On the other hand, in stimulus-modality-dependent occipitotemporal regions, task coding information was increased during task switching. Effective connectivity analysis revealed that the frontal regions signaled toward the modality-dependent occipitotemporal regions when a relevant stimulus was more ambiguous, whereas the occipitotemporal regions signaled toward the frontal regions when the stimulus was more distinctive. These results suggest that complementary prefrontal mechanisms in the left and right hemispheres help to achieve a behavioral goal when the external environment involves perceptual uncertainty.
SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: In our daily life, environmental information to achieve a goal is not always certain, but we make judgments in such situations, and change our behavior accordingly. This study examined how the flexibility of behavior is achieved in a situation where goal-relevant information involves perceptual uncertainty. Functional MRI revealed that the lateral prefrontal cortex (lPFC) in the left hemisphere is associated with behavioral flexibility, and the perception of ambiguous stimuli involves the lPFC in the right hemisphere. These bilateral lPFC signaled to stimulus-modality-dependent occipitotemporal regions, depending on perceptual uncertainty and the task to be performed. These top-down signals supplement task coding in the occipitotemporal regions, and highlight interhemispheric prefrontal mechanisms involved in executive control and perceptual decision-making.
Footnotes
The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
This study was supported by JSPS Kakenhi, 26350986, 26120711, 17H05957, 17K01989, 20K07727 to KJ, 17H00891to KN; 20H00521 to MT; a grant from Uehara Memorial Foundation to KJ; a grant from Takeda Science Foundation to KJ. We thank Maoko Yamanaka for administrative assistance. We also thank Tetsumi Tokita for technical assistance.